History

Details

Former rectory. Some C16 fragments; house remodelled c1800 and by Revd Mickleburgh 1833, re-roofed c1900. Local lias
stone rubble, dressed quoins and Ham stone dressings; mostly plain clay tile roofs, but north crosswing has double
Roman tiles, mostly with overhung gables, replacing thatch; yellow brick chimney stacks. Built on a curve, with
projection to east and with north crosswing; roadside elevation 5 bays, of which bays 2 and 3 are set back. Bay 1 is
the crosswing gable, with a tall pointed-arched window with 'Y'-tracing, lower part now blocked; bays 2 & 3 masked by
stone wall having plain boarded doors in heavy frames, with glazed roof over yard behind; upper bay 2 has a 2-light
4-centre arched Y-traceried window with label, containing stained glass; bay 4 has a 3-light hollow-chamfer mullioned
window, with pointed-arched light having incised spandrils, under square label, and above a small 3-light casement with
small rendered gable over, both windows diamond-leaded; to bay 5 another tall 'Y'-traceried window with transome and
square-stop label, diamond-leaded with thick cases to upper portion; above a gable with a stretched quatrefoil window,
and to each side of this bay blind pointed arches of nearly same height. East, garden, elevation of 6 bays, of which
bays 1 and 6 project: bay 1 has 4-centre-arched 'Y'-tracery windows to both levels, with quatrefoil light in gable, the
corners of the wing have deep chamfers; bay 2 and 4 have similar windows below and C20 casements above set in gables;
Bay 3 has a cross-traceried ogee-arched doorway with Gothic door, and 2-light mullioned window above; bay 5 has a
single-storey projection with flat roof behind battlemented parapet, with arched recesses to south and east faces with
C20 door in former, and in the latter a C19 circular window; bay 6 is the gable end of the crosswing, with
'Y'-traceried window and 4-centre-arched doorway to left. Inside, much work must be of the 1833 reshaping, but some is
earlier; the doors have pointed arched panels; the staircase of c1800; in the lower room; of the crosswing much Gothic
revival timberwork, but the ceiling appears to be late C16, 8 panelled with moulded beads having a few C19 repairs; the
south-east root has convex curved outer corners and a fine Gothic decorated plasterwork ceiling. General history of
building unclear, although at one stage there were 3 cottages, with a prebendary house to the north, demolished in the
C19: it was re-roofed c1900 after fire destroyed the thatched Ashill Inn opposite; it was sold by the Diocese in 1958.
Attached to the south-east corner of the house the south boundary wall, of late C19 in local stone ruble, with slim
near-ashlar piers, about 2 metres high, and capped with cast-iron railings having ogee-arched work and barbed top
points, and recessed pedestrian gate in centre, all adding to the setting of the house and the streetscene generally in
the centre of the village,

Listing NGR: ST3217717336

Selected Sources

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details

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